March 23, 1856, by C. H. Spurgeon
At New Park Street Chapel, Southwark
Hebrews 6:4-6 "For it is impossible for
those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were
made partakers of the Holy Ghost, And have tasted the good word of God, and the
powers of the world to come, If they shall fall away, to renew them again unto
repentance; seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and put
him to an open shame."
A child like attitude is imperative to have if we
want the Holy Spirit to teach us the things of the Bible, especially those things
that do not quite seem to make sense. When we have a childlike attitude we are
able to go to the Holy Spirit, completely destitute, waiting to be taught. Without
this child like attitude, we go to Him with what we think we know, and in our
own way we basically tell Him,” here I
am impress me.”
I found out at my own expenses what Oswald Chambers
means in the July 29 devotional. He said “It is not true to say that God wants to teach us
something in our trials; through every cloud He brings, He wants us to unlearn
something. God’s purpose in the cloud is to simplify our belief until our
relationship to Him is exactly that of a child—God and my own soul, other
people are shadows.”
Until the Spirit
taught me exactly what Oswald Chambers meant, during the time I was in the wilderness,
I had some doubts about Oswald. While in the wilderness you will find the biggest
stumbling block in your way is no one else but yourself. You have no idea how
hard it is to unlearn what we think we know and let Christ takeover. Yet, it
is a process we have to go through with each trial. In a sense, in our trials
He is teaching us, but He is teaching us to learn to let Him empty us of all
the garbage’s we have acquired on the way, —those garbage’s are about doctrines,
religions and theology—and fills us up with His true teaching. And
unless we learn to be emptied by Him to take on His standards and
understanding, all we have is some kind of enjoyment of Him but it is a whole
different story to go on possessing Christ.
Just before I leave
you, what Oswald meant by “other people are shadows” comes from the fact that
you are aware you are being so separated unto the Gospel, that other people, even
in the Church, are fading away” this does not mean you do not care. On the contrary,
you care much more than you want to. But, I am going to stop here and perhaps I
will continue this issue another day, another post.
HERE IS SPURGEON
There
are some spots in Europe which have been the scenes of frequent
warfare, as for instance, the kingdom of Belgium, which might be
called the battlefield of Europe. War has raged over
the whole of Europe, but in some unhappy
spots, battle after battle has been fought.
So
there is scarce a passage of Scripture which has not been disputed between the
enemies of truth and the upholders of it; but this passage, with one or two
others, has been the special subject of attack. This is one of the texts which
have been trodden under the feet of controversy; and there are opinions upon it
as adverse as the poles, some asserting that it means one thing, and some
declaring that it means another. We think that some of them approach somewhat
near the truth; but others of them desperately err from the mind of the Spirit.
We come to this passage ourselves with the intention to read it with the
simplicity of a child, and whatever we find therein to state it; and if it may
not seem to agree with something we have hitherto held, we are prepared to cast
away every doctrine of our own, rather than one passage of Scripture.
Looking at the scope of the whole
passage, it appears to us that the Apostle wished to push the disciples on.
There is a tendency in the human mind to stop short of the heavenly mark. As
soon as ever we have attained to the first principles of religion, have passed
through baptism, and understand the resurrection of the dead, there is a tendency
in us to sit still; to say, "I have passed from death unto life; here I
may take my stand and rest;" whereas, the Christian life was intended not
to be a sitting still, but a race, a perpetual motion. The Apostle, therefore
endeavours to urge the disciples forward, and make them run with diligence the
heavenly race, looking unto Jesus.
He tells them that it is not enough to have
on a certain day, passed through a glorious change—to have experienced at a
certain time, a wonderful operation of the Spirit; but he teaches them it is
absolutely necessary that they should have the Spirit all their lives—that they
should, as long as they live, be progressing in the truth of God. In order to
make them persevere, if possible, he shows them that if they do not, they must,
most certainly be lost; for there is no other salvation but that which God has
already bestowed on them, and if that does not keep them, carry them forward,
and present them spotless before God, there cannot be any other. For it is
impossible, he says, if ye be once enlightened, and then fall away, that ye
should ever be renewed again unto repentance.
We shall, this morning, answer one
or two questions. The first question will be, Who are the people here
spoken? Are they true Christians or not? Secondly, What is meant by
falling away? And thirdly, What is intended, when it is asserted,
that it is impossible to renew them to repentance?
I. First, then, we answer the
question, WHO ARE THE PEOPLE HERE SPOKEN OF? If you read Dr. Gill, Dr. Owen,
and almost all the eminent Calvinistic writers, they all of them assert that
these persons are not Christians. They say, that enough is said here to
represent a man who is a Christian externally, but not enough to give the
portrait of a true believer. Now, it strikes me they would not have said this
if they had had some doctrine to uphold; for a child, reading this passage,
would say, that the persons intended by it must be Christians.
If the Holy
Spirit intended to describe Christians, I do not see that he could have used
more explicit terms than there are here. How can a man be said to be enlightened,
and to taste of the heavenly gift, and to be made partaker of the Holy Ghost,
without being a child of God? With all deference to these learned doctors, and
I admire and love them all, I humbly conceive that they allowed their judgments
to be a little warped when they said that; and I think I shall be able to show
that none but true believers are here described.
First, they are spoken of as
having been once enlightened. This refers to the enlightening influence of
God's Spirit, poured into the soul at the time of conviction, when man is
enlightened with regard to his spiritual state, shown how evil and bitter a
thing it is to sin against God, made to feel how utterly powerless he is to
rise from the grave of his corruption, and is further enlightened to see, that
"by the deeds of the law shall no flesh living be justified," and to
behold Christ on the cross, as the sinner's only hope.
The first work of grace
is to enlighten the soul. By nature we are entirely dark; the Spirit, like a
lamp, sheds light into the dark heart, revealing its corruption, displaying its
sad state of destitution, and, in due time, revealing also Jesus Christ, so
that in his light we may see light. I cannot consider a man truly enlightened
unless he is a child of God. Does not the term indicate a person taught of God?
It is not the whole of Christian experience; but is it not a part?
Having enlightened us, as the text
says, the next thing that God grants to us is a taste of the heavenly gift,
by which we understand, the heavenly gift of salvation, including the
pardon of sin, justification by the imputed righteousness of Jesus Christ,
regeneration by the Holy Ghost, and all those gifts and graces, which in the
earlier dawn of spiritual life convey salvation. All true believers have tasted
of the heavenly gift. It is not enough for a man to be enlightened; the light
may glare upon his eyeballs, and yet he may die; he must taste, as well as see
that the Lord is good.
It is not enough to see that I am corrupt; I must taste that
Christ is able to remove my corruption. It is not enough for me to know that he
is the only Saviour; I must taste of his flesh and of his blood, and have a
vital union with him. We do think that when a man has been enlightened and has
had an experience of grace, he is a Christian; and whatever those great divines
might hold, we cannot think that the Holy Spirit would describe an unregenerate
man as having been enlightened, and as having tasted of the heavenly gift.
No,
my brethren, if I have tasted of the heavenly gift, then that heavenly gift is
mine; if I have had ever so short an experience of my Saviour's love, I am one
of his; if he has brought me into the green pastures, and made me taste of the
still waters and the tender grass, I need not fear as to whether I am really a
child of God.